README.md

Eclipse Integration Common Components

The Eclipse Integration Common Components are a set of plugins and features that are used and
consumed by other Eclipse tooling projects at SpringSource. It contains the commonly used parts
and provides two individually installable features:

Spring UAA (User Agent Analysis): The Eclipse integration for the Spring UAA project that helps
us to collect some usage data. This is completely anonymous and helps us to understand better how
the tooling is used and how to improve it in the future.

The SpringSource Dashboard feature brings you up-to-date information about SpringSource-related
projects as well as an easy-to-use extension install to get additional tooling add-ons, like the
famous Spring IDE or the Cloud Foundry Integration for Eclipse.

Both components are usually optional features of the other end-used-oriented tooling projects.

Installation

Usually you don't need to install these components directly from this project yourself. They come
as part of Spring IDE, the tc Server integration, the Grails IDE, or the Cloud Foundry Integration
for Eclipse.

However, if you want to install those features yourself, you could use the following update
sites manually:

Questions and bug reports:

There you can also ask questions and search for other people with related or similar problems
(and solutions). New versions are announced there as well, usually as part of the releases
of the consuming projects.

Developing Eclipse Integration Common Components

Just clone the repo and import the projects into an Eclipse workspace. The easiest way to ensure
that your target platform contains all the necessary dependencies, install a CI build into
your target platform and proceed.

Building Eclipse Integration Common Components

The Eclipse Integration Common Components project uses Maven Tycho to do continuous integration
builds and to produce p2 repos and update sites. To build the project yourself, you can execute:

mvn -Pe37 -Dmaven.test.skip=true clean install

Contributing

Here are some ways for you to get involved in the community:

Get involved with the Spring community on the Spring Community Forums. Please help out on the forum by responding to questions and joining the debate.

Create JIRA tickets for bugs and new features and comment and vote on the ones that you are interested in.

Github is for social coding: if you want to write code, we encourage contributions through pull requests from forks of this repository. If you want to contribute code this way, please reference a JIRA ticket as well covering the specific issue you are addressing.

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Before we accept a non-trivial patch or pull request we will need you to sign the contributor's agreement. Signing the contributor's agreement does not grant anyone commit rights to the main repository, but it does mean that we can accept your contributions, and you will get an author credit if we do. Active contributors might be asked to join the core team, and given the ability to merge pull requests.